Sudan Re-opens  Khartoum Airport After Army Crashes Mutiny

Sudan Re-opens Khartoum Airport After Army Crashes Mutiny

By Frank Kamuntu 

Sudan said it re-opened its airspace on Wednesday morning after an armed revolt from within its security forces shut down the capital’s airport for hours and left at least three people dead.

In a press conference, Gen. Abdel-Fattah Burhan, head of the country’s ruling transitional council, announced that “life has returned to normal,” following a tense stand-off between the armed forces and rogue intelligence officers who had fired shots in the air to demand better severance benefits.

However, airport authorities in neighboring Egypt said that as a precaution, all flights to Sudan remained suspended over security concerns.

The burst of unrest paralyzed street life in several parts of the capital, Khartoum, along with another western city. 
The armed forces will “not allow any coup to occur,” said Burhan, adding that it’s a “shame that weapons were raised in the faces of the people.”

The army quickly quelled the short-lived mutiny with “minimal losses,” said General Mohamed Othman al-Hussein, its chief of staff,on Wednesday.
“The clashes includes end of life of  two people and injured four others, including two officers,”he added.


Sudan army on standby in Khartoum

In a separate statement, the Doctors’ Union in Sudan reported that a father and his two children were killed when an errant artillery shell struck their home in a Khartoum suburb. The father was killed instantly, it said, and his 19-year-old daughter and 25-year-old son died on the way to the hospital. The different death tolls could not immediately be reconciled.

After trying to persuade the renegade officers to turn over their arms, the military stormed and retook the headquarters of an intelligence agency “using the least amount of force possible,” al-Hussein said.

The mutiny was the latest twist in Sudan’s fragile democratic transition after three decades of authoritarian rule under former President Omar al-Bashir. A sweeping protest movement ousted al-Bashir in April and led to the creation of a joint military-civilian government last summer.

During the transitional period, Sudan is devising ways to reorganize its armed forces. The program, al-Hussein said, requires dismantling an intelligence agency branch and merging it with a paramilitary unit known as the Rapid Support Forces, notorious for their brutal suppression of insurgencies in Sudan’s restive provinces.

Unrest ensued as angry intelligence officers, who were dismissed without receiving what they considered fair compensation, took to the streets.

Sudanese Prime Minister Abdallah Hamdok described the mutiny as “discord” aimed at “cutting off the nation’s transition to building a solid democracy.”

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